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View looking down through the cleared tree corridor at Steege Hill, Elmira NY
The view — a long cleared corridor opens up about a quarter mile in

STEEGE HILL

white loop  ·  Elmira, NY

~4 MI total distance
629 FT elev. gain
MODERATE difficulty
LOOP type
~2–2.5 HR time
✓ TODDLER kid-friendly
field-notes.txt Finger Lakes Land Trust

One thing to know upfront: you don't start on the White Loop. From the trailhead on Steege Hill Road you take the Yellow trail first, which adds roughly 1.3 miles to the out-and-back. Total distance ends up closer to 4 miles.

The best moment comes early — about a quarter mile in, a long cleared right-of-way corridor opens through the trees and you get a genuine valley view. It's a good place to stop, catch your breath, and let a three-year-old run around.

The White Loop itself earns its moderate rating through elevation. 629 feet in 2.7 miles means steady climbing. Nothing technical, but you'll feel it. One section of the original white-trail spur was closed due to perpetual muddiness; the reroute is well-signed and adds about 100 yards up the hill to the left.

Terrain is wooded throughout with patches of mud and occasional downed trees. Bring bug spray in summer.

My son is three. He hiked about half of it and rode the rest in an Osprey backpack carrier. He had a great time either way.

Painted turtle held in hand on the Steege Hill trail, showing the orange and red markings
Painted turtle — Chrysemys picta — found crossing the trail
Allegheny Mound Ant colony and closed white-trail spur sign at Steege Hill
The closed muddy spur — an Allegheny Mound Ant (Formica exsectoides) colony visible behind the sign
★ WILDLIFE LOG
Painted Turtle Chrysemys picta, crossing the trail, picked up briefly
Snake — crossing the trail, species unknown
Broad-winged Hawk Buteo platypterus, spotted in flight
Allegheny Mound Ant Formica exsectoides, large colony near the closed spur
VERDICT
★★★☆☆
Solid outing. The Yellow-to-White connector makes it a proper half-day hike rather than a quick loop. The corridor view early on is the highlight. Elevation gain is real. Wildlife cooperation was excellent — turtle, hawk, snake, ant mound. My three-year-old handled it well between hiking and the Osprey. Would go back in fall when the leaves are turning.
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